I was right all the time. Sure, it's possible that there are WMDs, but I regard that possibility about the same as I did at the beginning. I was always skeptical of the claim and was chastised and even insulted by many because of it.
I think the Bush Administration thought that there almost certainly were many WMDs there, and they figured that if they could just do an end-run around the proper methods of gaining evidence and just leap to any old excuse, they would be justified when the WMDs were found, which they believed was inevitable.
So it turns out they were quite obviously wrong. Even if WMDs are eventually found, it's obvious that the Bush Administration had no direct knowledge of them, that their "evidence" (whatever it was) was bogus, and that the program was nowhere near as advanced as we were led to believe.
This is exactly why skeptical thinking should apply in all areas, no matter how confident you are of what reality is.